While People Are Focusing on the AIIB, China Is Coming Close to Increase Power in Western Financial System

A man walks past the Bank of China Tower in Hong Kong on August 23, 2012. (Philippe LOopez/AFP/GettyImages)

After the first concrete details about the Asian Infrastructure and Investment Bank emerged last week, this Chinese project has taken center stage.

The broad consensus on the topic is that the AIIB will be Chinese dominated but most likely won’t be abused for Chinese political purposes. In addition, China remains adamant, it does not want to challenge U.S. financial hegemony or become a new reserve currency.

And yet, it is setting up the infrastructure necessary to do exactly that:

“We welcome and share this objective and will work closely with the Chinese authorities in this regard. As Managing Director Lagarde of the IMF has said, renminbi inclusion in the SDR basket is not a matter of ‘if’ but ‘when’,” David Lipton, first deputy managing director of the IMF said in Beijing.

The inclusion in the SDR can be undertaken without the approval of the U.S. Congress, because it does not involve the increase of China’s voting rights, although that step is likely to follow.

Halfway across the globe from its own gold trading hub in Shanghai, the Bank of China has now been admitted to participate in the London Bullion Market Association’s gold auction which is plays an important part in determining global gold prices.

“We are delighted to welcome Bank of China to the gold auction. The growth in daily volumes coupled with the increase in participation from around the globe, demonstrates strong market support for the independent governance and oversight we have implemented to bring transparency and trust to the gold price auction,” said Finbarr Hutcheson, the president of the Intercontinental Exchange, which oversees the auction.

So despite apparently not having any ambition to become another United States, China is not only setting up a competing infrastructure but is also rapidly gaining more influence within the system. It seems the Chinese regime’s mouthpieces should remember some Western philosophy cultivated throughout the ages: Actions speak louder than words.